Cutlerine
Gone. May or may not return.
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- 15
- Years
- The Misspelled Cyrpt
- Seen Mar 15, 2014
I know, I know! It's completely insane, and I love it. Especially the bit that's coming up in a couple of chapters.
Chapter Seventy-Four: Understand Understand the Concept of Failure
We slammed into the side of Groudon's neck like a living landslide; this was in fact what we were, so I should probably have expected it. Crashing through a sheet of blubber, I pulled us back just as Groudon recovered from the attack and attempted to bludgeon us to death with a boulder. In doing so, I tripped over Steven and Registeel, but Puck's technical mastery turned our fall into a very cool and inordinately painful backwards somersault.
"Steven!" I yelled. "Get back!"
But Registeel was motionless, arms frozen in place; I looked closer, and saw that Steven wasn't moving, and that there was a thin cable of pallid flesh connecting him to Groudon—
"Cal!" I swore, slipping into Nadsat, and leaped forwards again, ducking under a ham-fisted attack by Groudon and hurling a magically-generated boulder at the link between Steven and the monster. "Damn it, Glacia, you said it couldn't fight back yet!"
"I guess I was wrong!" she cried from behind me, as Steven jerked back into life, staring around wildly and then finally pulling the remnants of Groudon's tendril from his neck. A lot of blood came with it, and I wondered what Groudon had done...
"User death imminent," said a tinny voice. "If you can hear this message, it is probably too late to save your life..."
The voice was coming from Registeel; as it spoke, it wheeled around and fled the room, heading down one of the corridors that led deeper into the Magma base.
"Well, I guess you were right about them protecting their users," I muttered, taking a step back and pulverising another tentacle with a Stone Edge.
Yeah, Puck said, but we needed Registeel. Without Steven helping, Groudon's growing faster than we can break it.
I looked up at the colossal foetus, and knew it was true: already it was noticeably taller than before, and large sections of its surface were beginning to harden and darken in colour. It looked like solidifying lava.
"Kester!" shouted Glacia. "Over here!"
I swung Regirock around to the right, and saw that Regice had taken on the appearance of a Lego set, in that part of it consisted of a great many pieces that looked like they'd be painful to step on, and was scattered across the floor. It had lost three of the spines on its back, and one of its legs – and, from the desperate sort of way Glacia was firing Ice Beams at the encircling tentacles, I didn't think it would last that much longer.
"What the hell? I'm the least competent, and I'm the only one not in trouble?" I brought Regirock over to her and sliced through corpse-meat with one scything arm. "Can you still move?"
"We have to get out of here!" replied Glacia, rising upwards. "It's too strong, Kester! We can't take it."
"What? Can't we just—?"
A tentacle caught me full in the face, which threw my concentration somewhat; thankfully, my reflexive Astonish seemed to be enough to throw it off before it started eating me. Regirock caught it between its fist-stumps and battered it flat.
"You were the one who said it couldn't fight back!" I shouted at Glacia, aggrieved.
"There's a time to dwell on the shortcomings of others, and now is not it!" replied Glacia, swerving to avoid a questing pseudopod. "Look, do you want to leave or—"
"Let's get out of here," I said hastily. Glacia nodded, and Regice soared upwards and disappeared into the smoke. Meanwhile, Puck turned Regirock around and set us running towards one of the tunnel exits.
If we can just get out of his reach, we can easily tunnel to the surface, he said rapidly. Or we could find the exit path, it's your choice – hell's teeth! To the left!
As if sensing we were close to escaping, Groudon seemed to have focused all of its resources on us;a nest of tentacles burst from under a pile of rocks to the left, and Regirock, to avoid them, leaned dangerously far to the right, balancing on one leg. Since it was top-heavy and made of stone, it naturally toppled over, which resulted in my cracking my head against his shoulder blade. This was exquisitely painful, and caused me to see stars.
Why is it that you always end up with some sort of concussion? Puck sighed, making Regirock scramble to its feet (a singularly ungainly manoeuvre).
"I'm not concussed," I mumbled, blinking. "I'm just in agony."
Same difference, Puck replied as Regirock entered a tunnel and immediately began punching its way through the scattered remnants of the ceiling. I ducked my head as best I could to avoid the flying chips of granite; for about five minutes, we were surrounded by what seemed to be a sandstorm composed of gravel, and then, all at once, I felt the sun on my face and I looked up, blinking.
There was the sky, clear and blue; there was Jagged Pass, red and spiky. The Lone Altaria circled up above, and the only sound I could hear was his screeching – Groudon's roar had completely faded away.
I sighed, and closed my eyes.
"Puck," I said, "get me back to Sidney and Phoebe and Spike."
Can do, skipper, he replied, which was very confusing, and Regirock started to make its way up Jagged Pass at a sedate pace, rocks crunching underneath its feet. Maybe it was the shock, maybe it was the head injury, maybe it was the warm stone beneath me and the sun above; whatever the cause, I was asleep before we'd gone twenty feet.
---
There had been an entrance into the tower proper down a short flight of steps, which Sebastian had led the way down; Darren had followed warily, and Fabien, ever-conscious that he might hypothetically need to make a quick getaway at some point, brought up the rear with Blake (and Goishi and even Morgana, for extra protection. Not that he would need protection. Obviously.)
Now, our quartet of unlikely comrades stood on the tower's uppermost floor; it was shaped somewhat like a square doughnut, with a large hole in the centre that, upon examination, appeared to descend all the way down to the ground floor.
Everyone was standing near the walls.
"Zero!" called out Sebastian. His voice echoed up and down the tower, and the volume of this reply made everyone present wince. "Where are you?"
One of the Beldum from earlier floated up out of the gaping pit, and came to hover near them; it blinked twice, and drifted away towards a doorway in the far wall.
"I suppose we follow it," Sebastian said, and began to do so; however, he was stopped by Darren's voice.
"That door was not here a moment ago," he said. Sebastian halted, and looked back at him.
"So? An illusion, maybe? Does it matter?"
"I don't trust this place," Darren said abruptly. "We shouldn't be here."
"I second that," put in Fabien.
"Do you want to save the world or not?" asked Sebastian.
This shamed everyone into silence, and they followed him without complaint – though, in Darren's case, with visible reluctance.
The door led to stairs, which led to another doughnut-shaped floor; here, they found another door, which led to more stairs, and thence to another level. So they continued, their only point of reference the Beldum that glided along before them; such was the time-bending nature of their journey, they might have walked for five minutes, or a hundred years, and never known the difference.
At length, though, one of the rooms turned out to be different: this one had new railings around the hole in the centre, and glass in the windows. It also had a rich shag carpet, and a full set of living-room furnishings, from curtains to sofas to a working television. In fact, it was as if they'd just wandered into someone's house.
Sebastian stared. Whatever he'd expected, it hadn't been this. He glanced back at the door that they'd come through – but it was no longer there, having been replaced by a wall painted the same tasteful cream colour as the rest of its fellows.
The Beldum made an indescribable sound that reminded Sebastian of tearing linen and backwards Chinese characters, and sank into the abyss.
For a long moment, no one said anything, or moved.
"Er... what's goin' on?" asked Blake, evidently puzzled.
"I believe you were paying me a visit," replied Zero, and everyone jumped. He had definitely not been lounging in the armchair a moment ago; nor had there been a pretty young woman sitting on the sofa nearby. "Well?" he went on. "You seem rather ill at ease. Might I suggest you sit down?" He indicated a free sofa, and, somewhat confused, the four would-be world saviours took seats on it. "Wonderful." Zero stood up. "This is Courtney, as I'm sure you know."
"Hello," she said warmly; feeling oddly empty, Sebastian replied:
"Uh, hello."
Darren said nothing, just narrowed his eyes; Fabien and Blake attempted to look as inconspicuous as possible.
"Yes, I believe you two already know Courtney from work," Zero said. "Though I gather you were fired recently. It's lucky, really; if you hadn't, you would right now be making a progress through Groudon's partially-formed bowels." He paused meditatively. "But enough of that. I suppose you have some questions to ask me." He leaned forwards, elbows on kneecaps. "Fire away."
"Why – this is too easy," said Sebastian suspiciously. "There's some trap here, isn't there?"
"Indeed there is," Zero admitted. "But traps are such unpleasant things. Can't we leave that until the end? Ask the other questions first."
"Who are you?" asked Darren.
Zero took off his mask and brushed his hair out of his eyes; Darren flinched, while Blake, Fabien and Sebastian looked nonplussed.
"You," whispered the Goodwin. "What... why?"
"Someone you know?" asked Sebastian.
Darren shook his head.
"Someone that you should all know," he replied darkly. "But more importantly – why are you destroying the world?"
"That's easy," replied Zero. "Because I can."
"That's not an answer."
"Is too," said Zero; the childish tone was evidently intended, because he twisted his lips into an exaggerated pout as he spoke. "I was rather bored after my accident, and this is quite entertaining. The only problem is that I don't have any plans about what I'm going to do afterwards. It doesn't matter, though; I think I might be immortal, so I could just wait around until more sentient life evolves for me to torture."
His four guests stared at him.
"You're insane," Sebastian said at length.
Zero shook his head and wagged a finger.
"I am a great many things, Mister Emerald," he said, "but insane is not one of them. I speak nothing but the truth – or my perception of the truth. I find it to be a very malleable concept."
Sebastian shook his head.
"You said you had an accident. What do you mean by that?"
"Well. We both had an accident," Zero replied. "It was the same accident. I was investigating reports of a giant in Scotland, and I was behind the reports."
Sebastian closed his eyes and held his head together; it felt like it was about to collapse in on itself.
"What on earth are you talking about?" Fabien demanded to know. "Who is this? You and Courtney?"
"Courtney?" Zero looked over at where she sat; she hadn't moved since she had first greeted them. "No. Me and myself." He chuckled to himself for a moment, then broke off abruptly and said: "Next question, if you please."
Sebastian thought for a moment.
"Is there a way to stop the destruction of the world right now?"
Zero considered.
"Perhaps," he admitted. "Even with my foresight, I can't guarantee anything. There is still room for a deus ex machina situation to arise. But if you are thinking about, for example, the League's plan – that will fail. The golems cannot match either of the continental legendaries."
Sebastian sat up and bit his lip. That was not the most hopeful thing he'd ever heard.
"If you were trying to stop the world's end—"
"I'm not."
"I know, but if you were," Sebastian went on, "how would you go about it?"
"I see." Zero nodded. "I suppose I should have expected this question. The answer would be, Mister Emerald, that I would probably knock Groudon and Kyogre unconscious again. How I would do that would be somewhat difficult. I would have to break a piece off the moon, and crash it into their heads. Unfortunately for you, this would most likely have much the same effect as the super-volcano's eruption – which, by the way, is due to happen in about five hundred years, regardless of human input."
"All of us will be dead by then, so it doesn't matter," Sebastian said. "Look, is there any way to stop this apocalypse that doesn't involve everyone dying?"
Zero looked thoughtful.
"Very probably," he replied amiably. "But I'm afraid I don't really work that way. I find it difficult to conceive of scenarios that leave many people unharmed."
The quartet stared.
"You are insane," said Fabien bluntly. "Completely and utterly insane."
"Withou' a doub'," agreed Blake.
"Eek," added Goishi.
Zero sighed.
"I assure you I am not," he replied. "Do you have any more questions?"
"Yes," said Darren. "Just one."
"Go on."
"Why has your girlfriend turned into a fish?"
Everyone's eyes crawled slowly, so slowly, over towards Courtney, dreading that Darren's words would actually be true; regrettably, they were, and where the former Magma Administrator had been was a large, dead tuna.
Zero leaned forwards.
"Do you remember how you found out I was here?" he asked.
"Of course!" cried Fabien. "We..." He trailed off, uncertain; Sebastian waved a hand dismissively.
"Idiot," he said. "We..." He blinked. "Oh."
"'Oh' indeed," Zero said. "You see, you never found my location at all. I'm not really in Sky Pillar. Neither are you, for that matter. This is nothing but an extended hallucination. Hence Courtney's somewhat piscine qualities."
Sebastian stared, dumbstruck; beside him, Darren rose to his feet, one hand on a Poké Ball, and Fabien and Blake looked at each other as pairs of fools are wont to do.
"Don't even bother trying to attack me," Zero said, casting a pitying look at the Goodwin. "I'm not even Zero. I'm something that Zero created that looks and talks like Zero. For the most part, anyway. I was constructed with approximately 20% too much crazy; I think Zero was trying to make some sort of joke. Probably a very clever one, though of course I don't get it, being a two-dimensional representation of a man that even four dimensions don't do full justice to."
"Must you end a sentence with a preposition?" asked Fabien, sounding pained. "Say 'to which even four dimensions don't do full justice'."
"Yes, because obeying the rules blindly is always the best solution," retorted Zero sarcastically. "If you have no further questions, this hallucination is over."
"Wait! One more!"
All eyes were once again on Sebastian.
"Why exactly did you show us this?" he asked.
The faux Zero smiled.
"Because I wanted to tell you something," he said. "You see, I like to see how close I can get to failing without actually failing. It's a little game inside the bigger game."
"What? You mean you'll tell us how to save the world?" Sebastian leaped up. "Tell me!"
"If you want to save the world..." Zero paused, just so he could see the tension building on his audiences faces. "If you truly want to survive – well, I suppose that you'd better learn braille." He waved. "God rest ye, merry gentlemen; happy apocalypse."
And then he sort of wavered upwards into the ceiling, and the Beldum was back, only it wasn't a Beldum but a bowl of petunias that kept sighing, and everything tasted really strongly of purple...
...and then Sebastian was picking himself up out of a pile of trash in an Ever Grande alleyway and realising that someone had mugged him while he was out.
---
"Is he OK?"
"I don't know, help me get him out—"
"Kester! Are you all right!"
I opened my eyes, and found that, much to my surprise, I was.
"I'm fine," I said, sitting up and thereby inciting a terrible headache. "Ouch. OK, I'm not fine."
I looked around, and found that I was lying on the ground next to Regirock and a plume of noxious smoke. The top of Mount Chimney, then; this wasn't too bad. There were worse places to be, though of course there were better ones too. Like anywhere that was further away from Groudon.
"There was a lot of blood," Spike said – unnecessarily as it turned out, as I'd just brought my hand away from my head and found it was stained red.
"So I see," I replied. "What – what's happening?"
"We couldn't beat Groudon, even half-formed," Glacia told me. "Remember, we retreated?"
You fell unconscious on the way back up the mountain, Puck added.
"Oh yeah," I said. "I remember." I held my breath against the pain and got up; I was a little wobbly, but with Spike's help I managed to stay on my feet. "Where's Steven?"
"We're not sure," Spike said, biting her lip. "On the way down the mountain, I got a call from the Gym to say that a giant had just run through the town, but it had gone by the time we got here."
"You think it was Registeel?"
"It was telling anyone who'd listen that if they could hear that alarm, they were about five seconds away from being trampled."
"OK, so it was Registeel." I blinked. "Where did it go?"
"I don't know. I let some of my Trainers borrow two of my Staraptor to go looking, but I haven't heard back from them since."
"Glacia told us that if Registeel ran, Steven must be pretty badly hurt," Phoebe said. "Did you see—?"
"He lost a lot of blood," I cut in, suddenly nervous. "Oh God, I hope you find him soon..."
Way to reassure them, Kester, Puck said, as the League Trainers paled before me. Why not tell them they're adopted while you're at it, and that their parents hate them?
"We're doing our best," said Spike reassuringly, clasping my hand between both of hers. "How are you feeling?"
"Like I hit my head on a giant living boulder," I replied. "Look, can I ask what we're doing now?"
"No idea," said Sidney frankly. "Looks to me like we're finished. If all three of you couldn't defeat Groudon even before it was full-grown... Well, it doesn't look like there's a way out of this."
I suddenly felt weak at the knees, and had to sit back down; a sense of light-headedness washed over me, and I took a deep breath to try and calm myself.
"No," I said. "No, we can't have lost... come on, isn't there anything?"
"I don't know," Phoebe replied helplessly. "No one knows."
"The only people who might are Steven and Wallace," Glacia said. "I think – there has to be something more that they know about..."
There doesn't have to be anything, Puck said. But I don't think all is lost. Not yet.
I started.
"Puck has something to say," I told everyone. "Does someone have a phone he can use? Thanks, Ms. Turnford—"
"I already told you to call me Glacia."
"Right. Sorry. Glacia."
"Shut up, Kester," said Puck. "OK, so our first plan failed. That's OK. Because a true hero always has a Plan B."
"What is your Plan B?" asked Sidney.
"I'm trying to think of one as I talk," Puck admitted carelessly, "so... OK, OK, I got one. We've tried to get Groudon. If we can't get it, even with Regice's super-effective moves, we have no hope of getting Kyogre, who resists everything we could throw at it except Rock, which it can kill anyway. So we won't get them right now.
"But there is a chance we can take down Groudon. You see, in order to get to Kyogre it's going to have to cross the sea. It would take time for it to create land to walk on – time that it could better spend fighting its enemy – so I'm going to guess it'll go straight through the sea. And while it's in the water, at its most vulnerable, we'll take it down."
Silence greeted Puck's proposition.
"Um... how?" asked Spike.
"If we can knock it over and keep it down for long enough, it'll drown," said Puck simply. "Then Kyogre won't have any reason to fight, and hopefully it'll just swim away. And if it doesn't, we're screwed – but the human race goes down pretty valiantly, because drowning a gigantic dinosaur that can raise continents at will has to be one of the best middle fingers to God that a dying species can make."
Again, there was silence.
"Puck," said Spike, "I don't think that's going to work."
"Wait, wait." Sidney held up a hand for silence. "Think about it. This worked in Star Wars, when they were getting rid of AT-ATs on Hoth."
I stared up at him from the floor, and I'm pretty sure I looked horrified.
"You're seriously suggesting we base our valiant last stand against a world-destroying volcanic eruption on a Star Wars film?"
Sidney shrugged defensively.
"It was Puck's idea."
"Hey, don't shift the blame onto me," Puck said warningly. "I've dealt with your kind before, you kno—"
"Glacia, have your phone back."
Damn you!
"Look," said Phoebe, "I think you're all forgetting that making something as big as Groudon fall over in the sea will cause a tidal wave that'll hit everywhere around the caldera's rim."
"So the plan wouldn't work anyway," concluded Glacia. "Fine, so we're back to square one."
"Someone call Wallace," I suggested. "He might have an idea."
Phoebe nodded and wandered a few yards away to make the call; half a second later, Spike's phone rang, and she listened for a moment, worried, then said:
"OK. Be there in a minute."
She lowered her mobile and looked up at Glacia.
"That was one of my Gym Trainers," she said. "They've just found Steven."
---
"I'm fine. Really, I am – no, I must insist that you desist—"
There came a crash from inside the emergency room, and Steven strolled out, buttoning his shirt.
"Dear me," he said. "What trivialities you can be hospitalised for these days!"
Spike and I stared at him.
"Steven, you were partially devoured by a world-destroying monster," I said. "How can you call that a triviality?"
He started knotting his tie and shouldered open the door. From this angle, I could see the round, bloody hole on the side of his neck – and so could everyone else in the waiting room, who were all staring at him in the sort of way usually reserved for the living dead.
"Because I am fully recovered," Steven said patiently, halfway into the corridor. He began to straighten his cuffs. "Or at least, the world is in too much danger for me to be lying around being helped."
"Hey!"
Spike and I wheeled around to see the doctor limping out into the waiting room, trailing a stethoscope and rubbing his bruised head.
"At least let me bandage that!" he cried.
Steven looked at him, sighed and turned to us.
"Please," he said. "Can we get back to the others? With my dangerous blood loss came a brilliant idea, and I'd rather like to pass it on before Armageddon comes around."
I looked at Spike, who sighed and shrugged.
"OK," I told Steven, "let's go."
So we walked out the door, down the corridor and out of the hospital, accompanied all the way by the shouts of the doctor, who trailed after us like the world's most unsubtle stalker.
---
Sapphire looked out over the sea, and shivered. Storm clouds were gathering above them, and had been for hours – but they stubbornly refused to break. When the storm came, it was going to be enormous.
"Is it safe to be out here when the storm breaks?" she asked Wallace. He was standing a little further ahead on the Wailord's back, and shrugged.
"We won't be able to avoid it," he replied. "This is Kyogre's storm. Wherever it goes, the rain follows. It's the same with Groudon – it causes sunshine."
Sapphire sighed.
"It sounds like it would be nicer to be where Groudon is."
"It's desert-level sunshine."
"Oh." Sapphire thought. "On balance, I think I prefer the rain."
Wallace shrugged again.
"Neither sounds good."
Drake harrumphed and looked at the waves emanating from the spot above Kyogre.
"Shut up, Drake," said Wallace wearily, and went over to thump him.
Sapphire chewed a fingernail and stared out to the north-west.
"Desert-level sun," she muttered. "Kester, I hope you're OK..."
Chapter Seventy-Four: Understand Understand the Concept of Failure
We slammed into the side of Groudon's neck like a living landslide; this was in fact what we were, so I should probably have expected it. Crashing through a sheet of blubber, I pulled us back just as Groudon recovered from the attack and attempted to bludgeon us to death with a boulder. In doing so, I tripped over Steven and Registeel, but Puck's technical mastery turned our fall into a very cool and inordinately painful backwards somersault.
"Steven!" I yelled. "Get back!"
But Registeel was motionless, arms frozen in place; I looked closer, and saw that Steven wasn't moving, and that there was a thin cable of pallid flesh connecting him to Groudon—
"Cal!" I swore, slipping into Nadsat, and leaped forwards again, ducking under a ham-fisted attack by Groudon and hurling a magically-generated boulder at the link between Steven and the monster. "Damn it, Glacia, you said it couldn't fight back yet!"
"I guess I was wrong!" she cried from behind me, as Steven jerked back into life, staring around wildly and then finally pulling the remnants of Groudon's tendril from his neck. A lot of blood came with it, and I wondered what Groudon had done...
"User death imminent," said a tinny voice. "If you can hear this message, it is probably too late to save your life..."
The voice was coming from Registeel; as it spoke, it wheeled around and fled the room, heading down one of the corridors that led deeper into the Magma base.
"Well, I guess you were right about them protecting their users," I muttered, taking a step back and pulverising another tentacle with a Stone Edge.
Yeah, Puck said, but we needed Registeel. Without Steven helping, Groudon's growing faster than we can break it.
I looked up at the colossal foetus, and knew it was true: already it was noticeably taller than before, and large sections of its surface were beginning to harden and darken in colour. It looked like solidifying lava.
"Kester!" shouted Glacia. "Over here!"
I swung Regirock around to the right, and saw that Regice had taken on the appearance of a Lego set, in that part of it consisted of a great many pieces that looked like they'd be painful to step on, and was scattered across the floor. It had lost three of the spines on its back, and one of its legs – and, from the desperate sort of way Glacia was firing Ice Beams at the encircling tentacles, I didn't think it would last that much longer.
"What the hell? I'm the least competent, and I'm the only one not in trouble?" I brought Regirock over to her and sliced through corpse-meat with one scything arm. "Can you still move?"
"We have to get out of here!" replied Glacia, rising upwards. "It's too strong, Kester! We can't take it."
"What? Can't we just—?"
A tentacle caught me full in the face, which threw my concentration somewhat; thankfully, my reflexive Astonish seemed to be enough to throw it off before it started eating me. Regirock caught it between its fist-stumps and battered it flat.
"You were the one who said it couldn't fight back!" I shouted at Glacia, aggrieved.
"There's a time to dwell on the shortcomings of others, and now is not it!" replied Glacia, swerving to avoid a questing pseudopod. "Look, do you want to leave or—"
"Let's get out of here," I said hastily. Glacia nodded, and Regice soared upwards and disappeared into the smoke. Meanwhile, Puck turned Regirock around and set us running towards one of the tunnel exits.
If we can just get out of his reach, we can easily tunnel to the surface, he said rapidly. Or we could find the exit path, it's your choice – hell's teeth! To the left!
As if sensing we were close to escaping, Groudon seemed to have focused all of its resources on us;a nest of tentacles burst from under a pile of rocks to the left, and Regirock, to avoid them, leaned dangerously far to the right, balancing on one leg. Since it was top-heavy and made of stone, it naturally toppled over, which resulted in my cracking my head against his shoulder blade. This was exquisitely painful, and caused me to see stars.
Why is it that you always end up with some sort of concussion? Puck sighed, making Regirock scramble to its feet (a singularly ungainly manoeuvre).
"I'm not concussed," I mumbled, blinking. "I'm just in agony."
Same difference, Puck replied as Regirock entered a tunnel and immediately began punching its way through the scattered remnants of the ceiling. I ducked my head as best I could to avoid the flying chips of granite; for about five minutes, we were surrounded by what seemed to be a sandstorm composed of gravel, and then, all at once, I felt the sun on my face and I looked up, blinking.
There was the sky, clear and blue; there was Jagged Pass, red and spiky. The Lone Altaria circled up above, and the only sound I could hear was his screeching – Groudon's roar had completely faded away.
I sighed, and closed my eyes.
"Puck," I said, "get me back to Sidney and Phoebe and Spike."
Can do, skipper, he replied, which was very confusing, and Regirock started to make its way up Jagged Pass at a sedate pace, rocks crunching underneath its feet. Maybe it was the shock, maybe it was the head injury, maybe it was the warm stone beneath me and the sun above; whatever the cause, I was asleep before we'd gone twenty feet.
---
There had been an entrance into the tower proper down a short flight of steps, which Sebastian had led the way down; Darren had followed warily, and Fabien, ever-conscious that he might hypothetically need to make a quick getaway at some point, brought up the rear with Blake (and Goishi and even Morgana, for extra protection. Not that he would need protection. Obviously.)
Now, our quartet of unlikely comrades stood on the tower's uppermost floor; it was shaped somewhat like a square doughnut, with a large hole in the centre that, upon examination, appeared to descend all the way down to the ground floor.
Everyone was standing near the walls.
"Zero!" called out Sebastian. His voice echoed up and down the tower, and the volume of this reply made everyone present wince. "Where are you?"
One of the Beldum from earlier floated up out of the gaping pit, and came to hover near them; it blinked twice, and drifted away towards a doorway in the far wall.
"I suppose we follow it," Sebastian said, and began to do so; however, he was stopped by Darren's voice.
"That door was not here a moment ago," he said. Sebastian halted, and looked back at him.
"So? An illusion, maybe? Does it matter?"
"I don't trust this place," Darren said abruptly. "We shouldn't be here."
"I second that," put in Fabien.
"Do you want to save the world or not?" asked Sebastian.
This shamed everyone into silence, and they followed him without complaint – though, in Darren's case, with visible reluctance.
The door led to stairs, which led to another doughnut-shaped floor; here, they found another door, which led to more stairs, and thence to another level. So they continued, their only point of reference the Beldum that glided along before them; such was the time-bending nature of their journey, they might have walked for five minutes, or a hundred years, and never known the difference.
At length, though, one of the rooms turned out to be different: this one had new railings around the hole in the centre, and glass in the windows. It also had a rich shag carpet, and a full set of living-room furnishings, from curtains to sofas to a working television. In fact, it was as if they'd just wandered into someone's house.
Sebastian stared. Whatever he'd expected, it hadn't been this. He glanced back at the door that they'd come through – but it was no longer there, having been replaced by a wall painted the same tasteful cream colour as the rest of its fellows.
The Beldum made an indescribable sound that reminded Sebastian of tearing linen and backwards Chinese characters, and sank into the abyss.
For a long moment, no one said anything, or moved.
"Er... what's goin' on?" asked Blake, evidently puzzled.
"I believe you were paying me a visit," replied Zero, and everyone jumped. He had definitely not been lounging in the armchair a moment ago; nor had there been a pretty young woman sitting on the sofa nearby. "Well?" he went on. "You seem rather ill at ease. Might I suggest you sit down?" He indicated a free sofa, and, somewhat confused, the four would-be world saviours took seats on it. "Wonderful." Zero stood up. "This is Courtney, as I'm sure you know."
"Hello," she said warmly; feeling oddly empty, Sebastian replied:
"Uh, hello."
Darren said nothing, just narrowed his eyes; Fabien and Blake attempted to look as inconspicuous as possible.
"Yes, I believe you two already know Courtney from work," Zero said. "Though I gather you were fired recently. It's lucky, really; if you hadn't, you would right now be making a progress through Groudon's partially-formed bowels." He paused meditatively. "But enough of that. I suppose you have some questions to ask me." He leaned forwards, elbows on kneecaps. "Fire away."
"Why – this is too easy," said Sebastian suspiciously. "There's some trap here, isn't there?"
"Indeed there is," Zero admitted. "But traps are such unpleasant things. Can't we leave that until the end? Ask the other questions first."
"Who are you?" asked Darren.
Zero took off his mask and brushed his hair out of his eyes; Darren flinched, while Blake, Fabien and Sebastian looked nonplussed.
"You," whispered the Goodwin. "What... why?"
"Someone you know?" asked Sebastian.
Darren shook his head.
"Someone that you should all know," he replied darkly. "But more importantly – why are you destroying the world?"
"That's easy," replied Zero. "Because I can."
"That's not an answer."
"Is too," said Zero; the childish tone was evidently intended, because he twisted his lips into an exaggerated pout as he spoke. "I was rather bored after my accident, and this is quite entertaining. The only problem is that I don't have any plans about what I'm going to do afterwards. It doesn't matter, though; I think I might be immortal, so I could just wait around until more sentient life evolves for me to torture."
His four guests stared at him.
"You're insane," Sebastian said at length.
Zero shook his head and wagged a finger.
"I am a great many things, Mister Emerald," he said, "but insane is not one of them. I speak nothing but the truth – or my perception of the truth. I find it to be a very malleable concept."
Sebastian shook his head.
"You said you had an accident. What do you mean by that?"
"Well. We both had an accident," Zero replied. "It was the same accident. I was investigating reports of a giant in Scotland, and I was behind the reports."
Sebastian closed his eyes and held his head together; it felt like it was about to collapse in on itself.
"What on earth are you talking about?" Fabien demanded to know. "Who is this? You and Courtney?"
"Courtney?" Zero looked over at where she sat; she hadn't moved since she had first greeted them. "No. Me and myself." He chuckled to himself for a moment, then broke off abruptly and said: "Next question, if you please."
Sebastian thought for a moment.
"Is there a way to stop the destruction of the world right now?"
Zero considered.
"Perhaps," he admitted. "Even with my foresight, I can't guarantee anything. There is still room for a deus ex machina situation to arise. But if you are thinking about, for example, the League's plan – that will fail. The golems cannot match either of the continental legendaries."
Sebastian sat up and bit his lip. That was not the most hopeful thing he'd ever heard.
"If you were trying to stop the world's end—"
"I'm not."
"I know, but if you were," Sebastian went on, "how would you go about it?"
"I see." Zero nodded. "I suppose I should have expected this question. The answer would be, Mister Emerald, that I would probably knock Groudon and Kyogre unconscious again. How I would do that would be somewhat difficult. I would have to break a piece off the moon, and crash it into their heads. Unfortunately for you, this would most likely have much the same effect as the super-volcano's eruption – which, by the way, is due to happen in about five hundred years, regardless of human input."
"All of us will be dead by then, so it doesn't matter," Sebastian said. "Look, is there any way to stop this apocalypse that doesn't involve everyone dying?"
Zero looked thoughtful.
"Very probably," he replied amiably. "But I'm afraid I don't really work that way. I find it difficult to conceive of scenarios that leave many people unharmed."
The quartet stared.
"You are insane," said Fabien bluntly. "Completely and utterly insane."
"Withou' a doub'," agreed Blake.
"Eek," added Goishi.
Zero sighed.
"I assure you I am not," he replied. "Do you have any more questions?"
"Yes," said Darren. "Just one."
"Go on."
"Why has your girlfriend turned into a fish?"
Everyone's eyes crawled slowly, so slowly, over towards Courtney, dreading that Darren's words would actually be true; regrettably, they were, and where the former Magma Administrator had been was a large, dead tuna.
Zero leaned forwards.
"Do you remember how you found out I was here?" he asked.
"Of course!" cried Fabien. "We..." He trailed off, uncertain; Sebastian waved a hand dismissively.
"Idiot," he said. "We..." He blinked. "Oh."
"'Oh' indeed," Zero said. "You see, you never found my location at all. I'm not really in Sky Pillar. Neither are you, for that matter. This is nothing but an extended hallucination. Hence Courtney's somewhat piscine qualities."
Sebastian stared, dumbstruck; beside him, Darren rose to his feet, one hand on a Poké Ball, and Fabien and Blake looked at each other as pairs of fools are wont to do.
"Don't even bother trying to attack me," Zero said, casting a pitying look at the Goodwin. "I'm not even Zero. I'm something that Zero created that looks and talks like Zero. For the most part, anyway. I was constructed with approximately 20% too much crazy; I think Zero was trying to make some sort of joke. Probably a very clever one, though of course I don't get it, being a two-dimensional representation of a man that even four dimensions don't do full justice to."
"Must you end a sentence with a preposition?" asked Fabien, sounding pained. "Say 'to which even four dimensions don't do full justice'."
"Yes, because obeying the rules blindly is always the best solution," retorted Zero sarcastically. "If you have no further questions, this hallucination is over."
"Wait! One more!"
All eyes were once again on Sebastian.
"Why exactly did you show us this?" he asked.
The faux Zero smiled.
"Because I wanted to tell you something," he said. "You see, I like to see how close I can get to failing without actually failing. It's a little game inside the bigger game."
"What? You mean you'll tell us how to save the world?" Sebastian leaped up. "Tell me!"
"If you want to save the world..." Zero paused, just so he could see the tension building on his audiences faces. "If you truly want to survive – well, I suppose that you'd better learn braille." He waved. "God rest ye, merry gentlemen; happy apocalypse."
And then he sort of wavered upwards into the ceiling, and the Beldum was back, only it wasn't a Beldum but a bowl of petunias that kept sighing, and everything tasted really strongly of purple...
...and then Sebastian was picking himself up out of a pile of trash in an Ever Grande alleyway and realising that someone had mugged him while he was out.
---
"Is he OK?"
"I don't know, help me get him out—"
"Kester! Are you all right!"
I opened my eyes, and found that, much to my surprise, I was.
"I'm fine," I said, sitting up and thereby inciting a terrible headache. "Ouch. OK, I'm not fine."
I looked around, and found that I was lying on the ground next to Regirock and a plume of noxious smoke. The top of Mount Chimney, then; this wasn't too bad. There were worse places to be, though of course there were better ones too. Like anywhere that was further away from Groudon.
"There was a lot of blood," Spike said – unnecessarily as it turned out, as I'd just brought my hand away from my head and found it was stained red.
"So I see," I replied. "What – what's happening?"
"We couldn't beat Groudon, even half-formed," Glacia told me. "Remember, we retreated?"
You fell unconscious on the way back up the mountain, Puck added.
"Oh yeah," I said. "I remember." I held my breath against the pain and got up; I was a little wobbly, but with Spike's help I managed to stay on my feet. "Where's Steven?"
"We're not sure," Spike said, biting her lip. "On the way down the mountain, I got a call from the Gym to say that a giant had just run through the town, but it had gone by the time we got here."
"You think it was Registeel?"
"It was telling anyone who'd listen that if they could hear that alarm, they were about five seconds away from being trampled."
"OK, so it was Registeel." I blinked. "Where did it go?"
"I don't know. I let some of my Trainers borrow two of my Staraptor to go looking, but I haven't heard back from them since."
"Glacia told us that if Registeel ran, Steven must be pretty badly hurt," Phoebe said. "Did you see—?"
"He lost a lot of blood," I cut in, suddenly nervous. "Oh God, I hope you find him soon..."
Way to reassure them, Kester, Puck said, as the League Trainers paled before me. Why not tell them they're adopted while you're at it, and that their parents hate them?
"We're doing our best," said Spike reassuringly, clasping my hand between both of hers. "How are you feeling?"
"Like I hit my head on a giant living boulder," I replied. "Look, can I ask what we're doing now?"
"No idea," said Sidney frankly. "Looks to me like we're finished. If all three of you couldn't defeat Groudon even before it was full-grown... Well, it doesn't look like there's a way out of this."
I suddenly felt weak at the knees, and had to sit back down; a sense of light-headedness washed over me, and I took a deep breath to try and calm myself.
"No," I said. "No, we can't have lost... come on, isn't there anything?"
"I don't know," Phoebe replied helplessly. "No one knows."
"The only people who might are Steven and Wallace," Glacia said. "I think – there has to be something more that they know about..."
There doesn't have to be anything, Puck said. But I don't think all is lost. Not yet.
I started.
"Puck has something to say," I told everyone. "Does someone have a phone he can use? Thanks, Ms. Turnford—"
"I already told you to call me Glacia."
"Right. Sorry. Glacia."
"Shut up, Kester," said Puck. "OK, so our first plan failed. That's OK. Because a true hero always has a Plan B."
"What is your Plan B?" asked Sidney.
"I'm trying to think of one as I talk," Puck admitted carelessly, "so... OK, OK, I got one. We've tried to get Groudon. If we can't get it, even with Regice's super-effective moves, we have no hope of getting Kyogre, who resists everything we could throw at it except Rock, which it can kill anyway. So we won't get them right now.
"But there is a chance we can take down Groudon. You see, in order to get to Kyogre it's going to have to cross the sea. It would take time for it to create land to walk on – time that it could better spend fighting its enemy – so I'm going to guess it'll go straight through the sea. And while it's in the water, at its most vulnerable, we'll take it down."
Silence greeted Puck's proposition.
"Um... how?" asked Spike.
"If we can knock it over and keep it down for long enough, it'll drown," said Puck simply. "Then Kyogre won't have any reason to fight, and hopefully it'll just swim away. And if it doesn't, we're screwed – but the human race goes down pretty valiantly, because drowning a gigantic dinosaur that can raise continents at will has to be one of the best middle fingers to God that a dying species can make."
Again, there was silence.
"Puck," said Spike, "I don't think that's going to work."
"Wait, wait." Sidney held up a hand for silence. "Think about it. This worked in Star Wars, when they were getting rid of AT-ATs on Hoth."
I stared up at him from the floor, and I'm pretty sure I looked horrified.
"You're seriously suggesting we base our valiant last stand against a world-destroying volcanic eruption on a Star Wars film?"
Sidney shrugged defensively.
"It was Puck's idea."
"Hey, don't shift the blame onto me," Puck said warningly. "I've dealt with your kind before, you kno—"
"Glacia, have your phone back."
Damn you!
"Look," said Phoebe, "I think you're all forgetting that making something as big as Groudon fall over in the sea will cause a tidal wave that'll hit everywhere around the caldera's rim."
"So the plan wouldn't work anyway," concluded Glacia. "Fine, so we're back to square one."
"Someone call Wallace," I suggested. "He might have an idea."
Phoebe nodded and wandered a few yards away to make the call; half a second later, Spike's phone rang, and she listened for a moment, worried, then said:
"OK. Be there in a minute."
She lowered her mobile and looked up at Glacia.
"That was one of my Gym Trainers," she said. "They've just found Steven."
---
"I'm fine. Really, I am – no, I must insist that you desist—"
There came a crash from inside the emergency room, and Steven strolled out, buttoning his shirt.
"Dear me," he said. "What trivialities you can be hospitalised for these days!"
Spike and I stared at him.
"Steven, you were partially devoured by a world-destroying monster," I said. "How can you call that a triviality?"
He started knotting his tie and shouldered open the door. From this angle, I could see the round, bloody hole on the side of his neck – and so could everyone else in the waiting room, who were all staring at him in the sort of way usually reserved for the living dead.
"Because I am fully recovered," Steven said patiently, halfway into the corridor. He began to straighten his cuffs. "Or at least, the world is in too much danger for me to be lying around being helped."
"Hey!"
Spike and I wheeled around to see the doctor limping out into the waiting room, trailing a stethoscope and rubbing his bruised head.
"At least let me bandage that!" he cried.
Steven looked at him, sighed and turned to us.
"Please," he said. "Can we get back to the others? With my dangerous blood loss came a brilliant idea, and I'd rather like to pass it on before Armageddon comes around."
I looked at Spike, who sighed and shrugged.
"OK," I told Steven, "let's go."
So we walked out the door, down the corridor and out of the hospital, accompanied all the way by the shouts of the doctor, who trailed after us like the world's most unsubtle stalker.
---
Sapphire looked out over the sea, and shivered. Storm clouds were gathering above them, and had been for hours – but they stubbornly refused to break. When the storm came, it was going to be enormous.
"Is it safe to be out here when the storm breaks?" she asked Wallace. He was standing a little further ahead on the Wailord's back, and shrugged.
"We won't be able to avoid it," he replied. "This is Kyogre's storm. Wherever it goes, the rain follows. It's the same with Groudon – it causes sunshine."
Sapphire sighed.
"It sounds like it would be nicer to be where Groudon is."
"It's desert-level sunshine."
"Oh." Sapphire thought. "On balance, I think I prefer the rain."
Wallace shrugged again.
"Neither sounds good."
Drake harrumphed and looked at the waves emanating from the spot above Kyogre.
"Shut up, Drake," said Wallace wearily, and went over to thump him.
Sapphire chewed a fingernail and stared out to the north-west.
"Desert-level sun," she muttered. "Kester, I hope you're OK..."